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Congress will return to Washington, D.C., next week entering into a dead sprint to wrap up work before the year’s end, to cap off a blistering, often dramatic year on the Hill.

Both chambers will have three working weeks before again fleeing from the growing chill in Washington to their respective districts and states. And lawmakers have some of the biggest challenges of the year left to finish.

Perhaps the biggest looming legislative fight will be how lawmakers approach the expiring enhanced Obamacare subsidies, which dominated the recently-ended government shutdown.

Neither side has produced a fulsome plan on how to tackle the subsidies, though some solutions from Republicans, like funneling the subsidy funding into Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), have been floated.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., acknowledged last week that producing a solution would be a steep hurdle, and reiterated his commitment to Senate Democrats that they would get a vote on whatever proposal they produce no later than the second week in December.

Thune noted that ‘the one thing that unites’ the GOP is the belief that the subsidies need to be reformed and that rising healthcare costs need to be dealt with.

‘I think the affordability issue is a big issue,’ Thune said. ‘I think it’s been exacerbated by the way that Obamacare has been structured through the years, including the way that enhanced subsidies were structured by going directly to insurance companies and incentivizing them to enroll people without their knowledge.’

And the White House also has its own plan, which was expected to be rolled out earlier this week, but sidelined over reportedly disgruntled Republicans who disliked the proposed language.

When asked about specifics of the plan, and it was scrapped, a White House official told Fox News Digital that ‘there was never a healthcare announcement listed on [Monday’s] daily guidance.’

But the rumblings of a plan from President Donald Trump and the administration have encouraged some Senate Democrats.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., who originally proposed legislation to extend the subsidies, said that she was glad that the president was making an effort to ensure the credits don’t sunset by the end of the year.

‘I’ve had constructive conversations with many of my Republican colleagues who I believe want to get this done,’ Shaheen said in a statement. ‘They understand that the vast majority of people who benefit from these tax credits live in states the President won, and that the President’s own pollsters have underscored the enormous political urgency of Republicans acting.’

But the Obamacare issue is not the only issue Congress faces. Lawmakers are eyeing passage of the annual National Defense Authorization Act by the end of the year, the Senate is considering another package of Trump’s nominees and another package of spending bills is expected on the horizon, too.

That package of four bills, which is expected to include the Defense, Labor, Transportation and Commerce funding bills, would be a massive step toward averting yet another deadline to fund the government by Jan. 30, 2026.

Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins, R-Maine, said earlier this month that there was also an ‘interest on the House side’ to move the bills.

‘The more appropriations bills that we’re able to pass, the better off we’re going to be, the better off the American people will be served,’ she said.

There are also some lingering issues that could pose surprises before the year’s end, including how Congress will handle Russia sanctions and the controversial provision in the package that reopened the government that would allow senators to sue for upwards of $500,000 if their records were requested without notification.

On the sanctions front, the Senate has overwhelmingly bipartisan legislation that Trump appears to support, but there’s a possible disconnect between Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., on where the legislation should originate.

Thune believed it’d be better suited in the House given that it’s a revenue-geared bill, while Johnson warned that it would be time-consuming to pass the bill in the lower chamber because of how many different committees it would have to move through.

Some in the Senate are already looking ahead to next year, when lawmakers will be in full midterm election mode. Another crack at budget reconciliation, the process used to pass Trump’s marquee ‘big, beautiful bill,’ has been floated, but whether there is broad buy-in from congressional Republicans remains in the air.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said that it would be ‘legislative malpractice’ to not undertake the grueling process once more.

‘It’s just exquisitely dumb,’ Kennedy said. ‘Why would you not take advantage of an opportunity to pass something with 51 votes? That doesn’t mean that our Democratic colleagues can’t join with us, but if they don’t, they can’t filibuster. Did I mention it’s exquisitely dumb?’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Just like that, the final week of the college football season is in the books, which means there remains one week left until the official 12-team College Football Playoff bracket is released.

The top four seeds for the 12-team field appeared to be near locks, though that is now in question following No. 3 Texas A&M (No. 3 in College Football Playoff rankings) falling to No. 16 Texas (No. 16 in CFP rankings). There remains some uncertainty within the field for the remaining eight seeds as well, especially in the ACC and Group of Five.

To help sort it out, USA TODAY Sports brought live projections to the 12-team CFP bracket throughout Week 14 games, including a look at what the CFP top 25 rankings and projected 12-team bracket looked like heading into the final week of the regular season:

College Football Playoff Week 14 live scoreboard

Here’s a look at scores and results in Week 14 from the top 25 in the latest College Football Playoff rankings:

  1. Ohio State: Beat No. 15 Michigan 27-9
  2. Indiana: Beat Purdue 56-3
  3. Texas A&M:Lost to No. 16 Texas, 27-17
  4. Georgia: Beat No. 23 Georgia Tech, 16-9
  5. Texas Tech: Beat West Virginia 49-0
  6. Oregon: Beat Washington 26-14
  7. Ole Miss: Beat Mississippi State 38-19
  8. Oklahoma: Beat LSU 17-13
  9. Notre Dame: Beat Stanford 49-20
  10. Alabama: Beat Auburn 27-20
  11. BYU: Beat BYU 41-21
  12. Miami: Beat No. 22 Pitt 38-7
  13. Utah: Beat Kansas 31-21
  14. Vanderbilt: Beat No. 19 Tennessee 45-24
  15. Michigan: Lost to No. 1 Ohio State 27-9
  16. Texas: Beat No. 3 Texas A&M 27-17
  17. USC: Beat UCLA 29-10
  18. Virginia: Beat Virginia Tech 27-7
  19. Tennessee: Lost 45-24 to No. 14 Vanderbilt | ESPN (Fubo)
  20. Arizona State: Lost 23-7 to No. 25 Arizona
  21. SMU: Lost 38-35 to Cal
  22. Pitt: Lost 38-7 to No. 12 Miami
  23. Georgia Tech: Lost to No. 4 Georgia 16-9
  24. Tulane: Beat Charlotte 27-0
  25. Arizona: Beat No. 20 Arizona State 23-7

CFP bracket projections

Here’s a live projection of the 12-team CFP field after Week 14 games:

  1. Ohio State (12-0)
  2. Indiana (12-0)
  3. Georgia (11-1)
  4. Texas Tech (11-1)
  5. Oregon (11-1)
  6. Ole Miss (11-1)
  7. Texas A&M (11-1)
  8. Oklahoma (10-2)
  9. Notre Dame (10-2)
  10. Alabama (10-2)
  11. Virginia (10-2)
  12. Tulane (10-2)

* bolded teams denote shift (up/down) in the projected CFP bracket from current CFP bracket.

NOTRE DAME FINISHES ROUT OF STANFORD: Two fourth-quarter touchdowns by the Cardinal don’t take away from what was a dominant performance by the Fighting Irish. Marcus Freeman’s squad sent a message to the CFP selection committee with a 49-20 win over Stanford, likely securing its place as a top-10 CFP team in the process. – Zac Al-Khateeb (Sunday, Nov. 30 at 2:30 a.m. ET)

NOTRE DAME POURING IT ON STANFORD: It’s a matter when, not if, Notre Dame makes the CFP at this point. The Fighting Irish score another touchdown to increase their lead 42-3 on the road vs. Stanford. – Zac Al-Khateeb (Sunday, Nov. 30 at 12:30 a.m. ET)

NOTRE DAME CFP OUTLOOK:Despite losing Jeremiyah Love briefly, No. 9 Notre Dame is on track to pick up a win at Stanford, as the Fighting Irish lead the Cardinal 28-3 at halftime. A win for Notre Dame would help boost Marcus Freeman’s team’s odds at making the CFP for the second consecutive season.

Should No. 10 Alabama beat No. 4 Georgia in next week’s SEC championship game, the Crimson Tide should bump the Fighting Irish in the bracket. But for now, Alabama stays behind Notre Dame in the rankings. – John Leuzzi (Sunday, Nov. 30 at 12:08 a.m. ET)

SMU MISSES OUT ON ACC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME: Despite a valiant comeback effort, No. 21 SMU will miss out on the ACC championship game as Sam Keltner misses the potential, game-tying 52-yard field goal as time expires. As a result of Keltner’s missed field goal, Cal picks up the 38-35 upset win and Rhett Lashlee’s squad is heading back to Dallas without a ticket to the ACC championship game.

Who goes to the ACC championship game in the Mustangs’ place? That’d be five-loss Duke. Yes, a five-loss team will play in the ACC championship game with a berth to the CFP on the line. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 11:53 p.m. ET)

ALABAMA WINS IRON BOWL: After blowing a 17-0 lead, Alabama and Ty Simpson lead the 10th-ranked Crimson Tide to a 27-20 win over Auburn in the Iron Bowl to stave off a potential hit to the Crimson Tide’s CFP outlook. Simpson connected with Isaiah Horton for a 6-yard touchdown late in the fourth quarter to reclaim the lead. The Crimson Tide’s defense sealed the win with the recovery of Cam Coleman’s fumble on the next drive.

The Crimson Tide will meet up with No. 4 Georgia in the SEC championship game on Saturday, Dec. 6 in Atlanta. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 11:30 p.m. ET)

VIRGINIA SECURES ACC CHAMPIONSHIP SPOT: No. 18 Virginia is back in the ACC championship game for the first time since 2019 with a 27-7 win over Virginia Tech. The win for the Cavaliers moves them into the 12-team field as the ACC’s penciled-in representative, as the win also eliminated Miami and Georgia Tech from contention for the conference championship game.

It remains unclear as to whom the Cavaliers will play at Bank of America Stadium next Saturday, as it could be SMU or Duke, depending on whether the Mustangs can come back and defeat Cal on the road. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 10:20 p.m. ET)

BYU CFP OUTLOOK: Can BYU make the College Football Playoff? As things stand, the Cougars remain out of the field, as they came in at No. 11 in the latest CFP top 25 rankings. However, a win against No. 5 Texas Tech in the Big 12 championship game would get Kalani Sitake and the Cougars into the field and could make the Big 12 a two-bid league. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 9:35 p.m. ET)

TULANE LEADING AT HALFTIME: No. 24 Tulane is 30 minutes away from securing its spot in the American Conference championship game, as it leads Charlotte 21-0 at halftime. According to the American Conference, a win for the Green Wave would have Jon Sumrall’s squad hosting the conference championship game in New Orleans against North Texas on Friday, Dec. 6. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 9:20 p.m. ET)

There’s a ton of football to still be played, but an SMU loss would send Duke to the ACC championship game as a five-loss team. Click here to read the tiebreaker scenarios for the ACC. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 8:53 p.m. ET)

IRON BOWL KICKS OFF: The Iron Bowl is officially underway between Alabama and Auburn.

The 99th edition of the Iron Bowl has significant CFP implications involved for Alabama and the rest of the field. A win for Alabama would boost the Crimson Tide’s chances of making the field, while a loss would open the door for several programs to steal an at-large bid. Some notable teams that could steal a bid include No. 11 BYU, which will meet No. 5 Texas Tech in the Big 12 title game in Week 15, No. 12 Miami, No. 14 Vanderbilt and No. 16 Texas. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 8 p.m. ET)

VANDERBILT ROLLS TENNESSEE: Vanderbilt picks up its first 10-win season in program history with a commanding 45-24 win over No. 19 Tennessee. It’s the fourth ranked win of the season for the Commodores, which makes for an impressive resume for Clark Lea’s squad.

Four ranked wins to two losses may not be enough for Vanderbilt to get into the field, making the Commodores an early candidate for a spot on the CFP snub list. They were ranked No. 14 in the latest CFP top 25. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 7:32 p.m. ET)

OKLAHOMA OUTLASTS LSU: Oklahoma survives a late-season scare vs. unranked LSU, using a fourth-down stop to force a turnover on downs vs. the Tigers and escape with a 17-13 win. With the 10-2 Sooners ineligible for the SEC championship game and already ranked No. 8 in the CFP, it seems Brent Venables and Co. will be in line for a playoff berth and potential first-round home game.

SEC CHAMPIONSHIP BERTH ON LINE IN IRON BOWL: Alabama is a little over an hour away from kickoff for its biggest game of the season: The Iron Bowl.

A win in the Iron Bowl would clinch an SEC championship game berth for the Crimson Tide and would go a long way for Kalen DeBoer’s squad’s CFP outlook. A loss would almost certainly keep the Crimson Tide out of the field for the second consecutive season. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 6:14 p.m. ET)

OKLAHOMA TIED WITH LSU: Is Oklahoma on upset watch with a 3-3 tie with LSU at halftime? That remains to be seen with a lot of football to be played in Norman. But it does raise the question of what a Sooners loss to the Tigers does to the CFP picture.

The Sooners entered Week 14 well-positioned to host a CFP first-round game coming off three consecutive top-25 wins against Tennessee, Alabama and Missouri. A loss to LSU, however, could take Oklahoma out of the 12-team field as a three-loss team with no path to the SEC championship game. That could open the door for Texas to take Oklahoma’s spot in the field after the Longhorns’ marquee upset of No. 3 Texas A&M. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 5:12 p.m. ET)

TEXAS TECH IN BIG 12 CHAMPIONSHIP GAME: Texas Tech clinched its spot in the Big 12 title game well before kicking off against West Virginia in Morgantown. The Red Raiders went on to beat the Mountaineers 49-0 to avoid any negative hit to their CFP outlook. The win should keep Joey McGuire’s squad in the top four after Texas A&M’s drop last night. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 4:02 p.m. ET)

MIAMI DEFEATS PITT: Carson Beck and Miami handle business and defeat No. 22 Pitt handily, 38-7. It’s the fourth ranked win of the season for the Hurricanes, who entered Week 14 playing with a small margin of error to make the CFP and the ACC championship game.

Is a 4-0 record against ranked opponents this season enough to keep the Hurricanes in the field, even if they are unable to get into the ACC championship game? It’s going to be something to monitor leading into the next CFP top 25 rankings reveal, especially with Notre Dame just being three spots ahead of Miami in the most recent rankings. – John Leuzzi (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 3:41 p.m. ET)

OHIO STATE STAYS AT TOP SPOT: Ohio State dominated Michigan 27-9 on Nov. 29, ending its 4-game losing streak against its top rival. Next is a Big Ten championship game matchup against No. 2 Indiana, with the winner taking the No. 1 seed in the final College Football Playoff bracket. – Austin Curtright (Saturday, Nov. 29 at 3:36 p.m. ET)

TEXAS A&M DROPS AFTER TEXAS LOSS: Texas A&M needed a win to get into the SEC championship game. Arch Manning and the Longhorns, however, got in the way of that with a 27-17 win over the Aggies on Friday, a loss that has dropped Mike Elko’s squad to the No. 7 projected seed and moved Georgia, Texas Tech, Oregon and Ole Miss all up a spot. – John Leuzzi (Friday, Nov. 28 at 11:55 p.m. ET)

CFP rankings after Week 13

Similar to how the top 25 rankings looked on Sunday, Nov. 23, the top five seeds did not change between the Week 12 CFP top 25 rankings unveil and the Week 13 one, as Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M, Georgia and Texas Tech stayed at No. 1 through No. 5, respectively. 

Here’s a full look at what the CFP top 25 rankings looked like following the selection committee’s fourth unveiling:

  1. Ohio State
  2. Indiana
  3. Texas A&M
  4. Georgia
  5. Texas Tech
  6. Oregon
  7. Ole Miss
  8. Oklahoma
  9. Notre Dame
  10. Alabama
  11. BYU
  12. Miami
  13. Utah
  14. Vanderbilt
  15. Michigan
  16. Texas
  17. USC
  18. Virginia
  19. Tennessee
  20. Arizona State
  21. SMU
  22. Pitt
  23. Georgia Tech
  24. Tulane
  25. Arizona

CFP Week 13 bracket

Here’s a look at what the 12-team CFP bracket looks like after Week 13:

  1. Ohio State
  2. Indiana
  3. Texas A&M
  4. Georgia
  5. Texas Tech
  6. Oregon
  7. Ole Miss
  8. Oklahoma
  9. Notre Dame
  10. Alabama
  11. Miami
  12. Tulane

* Denotes five highest ranked conference champions

CFP schedule

Here’s a full breakdown of the 2025-26 College Football Playoff bracket schedule:

CFP First-Round (On campus sites)

  • Friday, Dec. 19
    • Game 1: 8 p.m. ET
  • Saturday, Dec. 20
    • Game 2: Noon ET
    • Game 3: 3:30 p.m. ET
    • Game 4: 7:30 p.m. ET

CFP Quarterfinals

  • Wednesday, Dec. 31
    • Cotton Bowl (Game 5): 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Thursday, Jan. 1
    • Orange Bowl (Game 6): Noon ET
    • Rose Bowl (Game 7): 4 p.m. ET
    • Sugar Bowl (Game 8): 8 p.m. ET

CFP Semifinals

  • Thursday, Jan. 8
    • Fiesta Bowl (Game 9): 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Friday, Jan. 9
    • Peach Bowl (Game 10): 7:30 p.m. ET

CFP Championship

  • Monday, Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium (Miami): 7:30 p.m. ET

When is the next CFP rankings reveal?

The fifth College Football Playoff top 25 rankings is set for 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Dec. 2. It is the final release of the top 25 rankings by the CFP selection committee before the official release on Sunday, Dec. 7 at noon ET.

Here’s a look at the remaining dates on when the College Football Playoff rankings will be released:

  • Tuesday, Dec. 2: 7 p.m. ET
  • Sunday, Dec. 7: Noon ET
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Quarterback never used to be a concern for the Pittsburgh Steelers.

That was until Father Time caught up to Ben Roethlisberger, of course. Since his retirement, it has been a revolving door at the most important position in sports, rotating through veterans and rookies without finding one capable of sticking around.

That road led the Steelers to Aaron Rodgers in 2025, but an injury has forced the Steel City to turn to an old friend, Mason Rudolph, during QB1’s absence.

Rodgers is battling a wrist injury, one that was enough to keep him out against the Chicago Bears in Week 12. With the Steelers tumbling down the AFC playoff standings and locked in a race for the top spot in the AFC North to the rival Baltimore Ravens, Rodgers’ return has become even more important.

Here’s a look at when Rodgers could get back into game action.

Is Aaron Rodgers playing today?

Rodgers is set to make his return to the field on Sunday vs. the Buffalo Bills.

Rodgers suffered a fractured left wrist in Week 11, but NFL Media’s Ian Rapoport reported that doctors called the turnaround too quick for the 41-year-old in Week 12. NFL Media adds that Rodgers is dealing with fractures to three bones in his left wrist.

While the Steelers haven’t provided any update on their starting quarterback, he did push to play before being ruled out against the Bears in Week 12.

Rudolph got the start instead for the injured veteran and the Steelers went on to lose 31-28 in Chicago.

Considering Rodgers practice in a limited fashion leading up to that Chicago contest, there is reason to believe he should be in a better spot to contribute this time around.

Steelers QB depth chart

  • Aaron Rodgers
  • Mason Rudolph
  • Will Howard

While Rodgers recovers from his wrist injury, the Steelers quarterback room is left with a veteran backup in Rudolph and a rookie to slide into the QB2 role for the time being.

Howard was a sixth-round pick by the Steelers out of Ohio State, but hasn’t seen any game action in his rookie year.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The scene inside Michigan Stadium, in the cold and snow, played out like a horror film … for the home team, at least.

Michigan football fans left in droves throughout the fourth quarter on Saturday, Nov. 29, as Ohio State fans celebrated in enemy territory. OSU’s mascot, Brutus, had drawn a large X through the ‘M’ in Michigan in the southern end zone. Chants of ‘O-H … I-O’ reverberated through the concourse. Some Buckeyes jumped up on the brick wall surrounding the field to celebrate with friends, family and supporters. Others circled the field, high-fiving every person clad in scarlet and gray. A day that began with the Wolverines not having lost to OSU in 2,191 days ended in less-than-pleasant digits: 27-9, as in the final score of Ohio State’s first thumping of Michigan in almost six years.

There were issues galore for the maize and blue, with multiple shortcomings demonstrated by the domination delivered by the visitors from the south.

But the most glaring? The passing game.

Ohio State’s Julian Sayin, a redshirt freshman, showed why he could be attending the Heisman Trophy ceremony in December. The first-year starter went 19-for-25 for 231 yards, three touchdowns and one interception (on his second offensive play).

Michigan’s freshman didn’t fare nearly as well. Bryce Underwood — the local five-star talent with an eight-figure NIL deal — completed just 8-of-18 passes for 63 yards and an interception.

Blame Underwood?

‘There’s no blame, there’s no pointing fingers,’ Michigan coach Sherrone Moore said afterward. ‘It’s a whole team effort. We’ve got to work to get better.’

Indeed, Underwood has been held to a high standard — almost impossibly so — for much of the season. And that’s despite history arguing against success, with virtually no true freshman starring in his first campaign.

And yet, Underwood was pursued at Belleville, and wooed out of his commitment to LSU, for moments exactly like this. Last year, in U-M’s three-touchdown upset of OSU, Davis Warren completed 9-of-16 passes for 62 yards and two interceptions. The fix appeared simple — get a competent quarterback, and the wins would become lopsided.

Instead, Underwood attempted two more passes, had one more yard and one fewer interception. That wasn’t the result anybody had in mind.

It started with a lopsided playsheet that featured 18 runs and just five passes in the first half.

‘That wasn’t the plan,’ Moore said. ‘You wanted to be balanced in what we did. … We didn’t do a good enough job.’

Of course, when Underwood did throw, it didn’t go according to plan, either. Favorite target (fellow true freshman) Andrew Marsh didn’t have a reception. Heck, he didn’t even have a single target.

All afternoon, Underwood was simply unraveled by Ohio State’s defense, which entered No. 1 in the nation overall and against the pass.

At one point, on 3rd-and-long, he had Marsh running open up the seam … and checked down. On another 3rd-and-long, he had Donaven McCulley open on a corner route … but threw it too high and outside — by the time McCulley made a leaping one-handed grab, he landed well out of bounds. Late, on 4th-and-6, he forced a bullet pass toward McCulley … who wasn’t ready; it instead went into the arms of OSU DB Davison Igbinosun.

Underwood ends his regular season with 10 ‘big-time throws’ and 11 ‘turnover-worthy plays,’ per Pro Football Focus’ system. Those are totals not far from Warren last year — six and nine, respectively.

Underwood’s stats through 12 games: 171-for-275 (62.2%) for 2,166 yards, nine touchdowns and five interceptions. He didn’t pass for a touchdown in four of his final five games, and had just one more passing TD (six) than he did giveaways (five) over his final six games.

Again, there’s blame to go around. Missing his top two running backs — Justice Haynes (for most of the second half of the season) and Jordan Marshall (for most of Saturday) — and pressure seeping through his offensive line on what felt like nearly half his dropbacks made a tough job nearly impossible.

But the raw talent of Underwood was supposed to make up for those potential shortcomings.

Half of U-M’s starting offense, by season’s end, were freshmen, either of the true or redshirt variety.

There’s a clear foundation to build upon.

But that will only happen with an offseason of soul-searching and dedication.

Michigan made its goals clear this year: College Football Playoff or bust.

In that regard, well, the Wolverines busted.

‘There is no failure in my eyes, because of how far I came and where I am at this moment,’ Underwood told the Free Press back in June. ‘But success would be winning the national championship my freshman year. So that’s my goal.’

Underwood was just a freshman; this season wasn’t a failure.

But, by his own words, it came up well short of success.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Alabama is supposed to be a playoff team. Are we sure about that, after this clunky Iron Bowl win against struggling Auburn?
  • Crowded CFP bubble includes Alabama. Tide would remove doubt by winning SEC Championship.
  • Auburn coaching search needs to end somewhere other than DJ Durkin.

AUBURN, AL – Alabama is a playoff team. At least, that’s what the selection committee’s rankings told us this week.

What about next week? Some shuffling could be in order.

Because, as I watched No. 10 Alabama yuck and muck around in a 27-20 victory in the Iron Bowl, I had to remind myself a few times that this is supposed to be a playoff team.

Could’ve fooled me.

Alabama survived this scare by forcing and recovering a fumble to halt Auburn 20 yards short of tying the score, late in the fourth quarter.

Or, maybe I’m the fool, because this is probably just what a borderline playoff team looks like in this 12-team CFP era.

Flawed and occasionally brilliant. Talented but imperfect. Better than most, but far from elite.

Alabama’s resume is as good or better than that of Notre Dame, Brigham Young, Miami, Vanderbilt, Texas, Utah or anyone else you might want to shove onto this crowded bubble.

If the Tide win the SEC Championship game against Georgia, they’re in the playoff, no questions asked.

If they lose but show well, they’re back on the bubble. Which side of the bubble? Don’t ask me, that’s for the committee to decide.

Bigger College Football Playoff means flawed contenders like Alabama

I guess I’m still rewiring to what a playoff team looks like. Two years ago, this Alabama team probably would’ve been headed toward something like the Citrus Bowl. Now, that’s a playoff team.

Maybe. Maybe not. This lackluster performance left some work to be done.

‘It wasn’t perfect, … but they had their backs to the wall, and I’m really proud of the way they’ve just continued to grit and grind,’ said Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer, whose team scored the winning touchdown on Ty Simpson’s fourth-and-2 toss with less than four minutes to go.

If Alabama loses to Georgia in Atlanta and misses the playoff, that’s no travesty. The playoff can exist without this team.

If Alabama qualifies, that’s no travesty, either. Roughly six bubble teams are vying for about two spots, and I’m not convinced much separates any of those teams.

On this night, not much separated Alabama from five-win Auburn.

I know what the fine folks in the SEC headquarters in Birmingham would say. They’d tell you this was another sign of the conference’s depth and how tough it is to win on road in the SEC, and nothing is a given in rivalry games, and more propaganda goes here.

Some of that’s probably true, and it’s also true Ohio State bludgeoned rival Michigan in the snow in Ann Arbor, hours before Alabama beat Auburn in a pillow fight on the Plains filled with penalties, dropped passes and enough incompletions to fill a full month for the Buckeyes’ Julian Sayin.

While Ohio State, Indiana and Texas Tech feasted on their foes this Thanksgiving weekend, Alabama needed some fourth-quarter grit to fend off one of the SEC’s worst teams.

“We’re 10-2 and 7-1 in the SEC,’ DeBoer said. ‘We’ve got quality strength wins and some wins on the road. We’ve got more than a playoff-caliber football team. There’s not a question in my mind.”

Does Auburn elevate DJ Durkin? Surely not

Competitive though it was, this won’t be remembered as one of the finest installments in the 90 editions of the Iron Bowl. Auburn’s first three possessions produced no first downs, six yards and three punts. Tigers receivers dropped about as many passes as they caught.

You could’ve headed up to the highest reaches of Section 57 in the upper deck and found a few fellas who could’ve devised a better game plan than Auburn trotted out in a miserable first quarter.

The Tigers finally moved the chains for the first time, seconds before the first quarter ended, and the home fans let out a cheer at least half-baked in derision.

Those turned to impassioned cheers in the second half, as Auburn rallied and tied the score in the fourth quarter.

Hard though these Tigers fought, Auburn fans deserve so much better than five miserable losing seasons in a row and six straight Iron Bowl defeats. Some fans probably exited Jordan-Hare Stadium fearful that this competitive Iron Bowl might persuade athletic director John Cohen to remove the interim tag from DJ Durkin and pretend he’s the solution to all that ails Auburn.

What a heaping helping of humble pie a Durkin hire would be.

Durkin is a capable defensive coordinator, but Auburn needs a coaching direction more hopeful than someone with a 12-17 career record.

Maryland fired Durkin from his last coaching job in 2018 amid a season of human tragedy, strife and an internal investigation that produced findings of a problematic culture and alarming allegations against the team’s strength coach.

Surely, Auburn should expect more of itself than simply promoting Hugh Freeze’s leftover lieutenant.

DeBoer should expect more from his offense than what the Tide mustered here.

Simpson cannot seriously be called a Heisman Trophy candidate anymore.

Can Alabama be called a playoff team? I wouldn’t expect the committee to be convinced by this performance.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Getting recruited: This is Part 2 of a series that looks behind the curtain of college recruiting. USA TODAY Sports was granted behind-the-scenes access by the football staff at the University of Pennsylvania, a Division I program that offers a high academic profile but no Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) money or scholarships. This week: Negotiating the constant change of college sports.  

Read Part I: How college recruiting can be like the dating game

PHILADELPHIA — When Jon Dupont was just starting out as a football coach, he had to fend off flying mammals as he ascended the stairs to his attic domicile.

‘I’d have a tennis racket over my head so that the bats didn’t fly down and buzz me,’ he says.

Dupont remembers making $2,500 a year at Worcester (Massachusetts) Polytechnic Institute, but the housing was free (critters included).

It got better when he moved to Trinity College in Hartford, (Connecticut). The school paid for his master’s degree in economics, and he got free housing and meals.

‘Some people aspire to be a college football coach someday,’ says Dupont, who has been on Penn’s football staff since 2006. ‘I thought at first I was gonna be an engineer and then I was gonna work in finance. I’m like, ‘I’ll try that out for a couple years while I try to figure out what I want to be.’

‘My goal was to get my master’s degree because I knew that having an advanced degree was gonna be important. And I knew how volatile being a football coach is.’

Dupont spoke Nov. 19 from his office at Franklin Field. Less than a week later, he and his nine full-time colleague faced an unknown future in their field after head coach Ray Priore stepped down after 38 years on the staff.

Priore’s replacement will have the opportunity to evaluate and retain the staff, but they understand new coaches tend to bring in their own guys.

‘I don’t know what I would do when I grow up,’ Dupont said that day with a smile.

The thrill of playing and coaching sports can be intoxicating. But what we experience away from the field can sometimes make us feel helpless.

There are politics involved from youth to professional sports, and there are unknowns. Who truly knows who you are and what you can do? How can you get your name in front of people who can enhance your experiences and sports career?

USA TODAY Sports offers advice about how young athletes can best present themselves in this world of inevitable uncertainty and change.

Make sure your offer, or opportunity to play at a college or university, is firm

Recruiting is about building relationships. There are recruits in Penn’s expected freshman class next fall whom the current coaches worked to admit.

Other recruits are in midstream, and the coaches, before their fate at the school is determined, will try and keep them in play.

If you are an incoming recruit and the coach who recruited you leaves the school, have a conversation with the athletic department, admissions office and/or new coaching staff. See if you can get something in writing that you will be part of the team when you enroll.

At some point in any recruiting process, where things can change on a dime, you might have to look elsewhere.

‘The problem we have is everyone’s gonna say yes to you until it filters out,’ Bob Benson, Penn’s associate head coach, told me less than two weeks ago, ahead of Penn’s final game. ‘And you can’t really afford to say no. You gotta be very diligent.’

Priore, Penn’s outgoing head coach, said schools initially offer based on talent, but it’s your job to know the difference between offers and committable offers.

He has seen recruits post on social media in the spring of their junior years they have offers from Ivy League schools. He knows, though, that there are rigorous academic hurdles Ivy League recruits must clear and a complicated financial aid eligibility form that prolong the process.

‘What we say is you’d be someone we’d love to have,’ Priore said before he stepped down. ‘We can offer you a spot if you get into school but from a talent standpoint, you’re really talented but there are all these different stages.

‘Everybody can offer anybody. But what are you offering? It’s our evaluation and based upon everything going right, then it could be all great for you. But it’s just the first thing.’

A ‘broken’ system; do you need to pay for a recruiting service?

Under Priore, Penn worked from a list of thousands of kids per high school class, which it eventually whittled down to 20 to 40 on a flow chart.

How do we even get noticed?

Every year, according to Brian Cruver, there’s roughly 4.5 million athletes self-identifying as wanting play their sport in college.

Cruver was a parent wondering that question. He didn’t have an extensive sports background and his son, Carson, wanted to pursue playing football in college.

Cruver is a tech startup executive who help found billion dollar businesses, including a germ-killing robot company called Xenex. His latest venture is called Scorability. He started it with his friend, Brett Andrew, whose daughter, Gella, plays beach volleyball for Florida State. Cruver’s son, Carson, ended up at Florida Atlantic.

Scorability is a centralized database that coaches access that includes athletes’ transcripts, athletic numbers and videos as well as coach and even parent evaluations.

It has initially dipped its feet into football recruiting and plans to expand to women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and softball in early 2026.

‘I’m good at building great software product teams that can take those products to market,’ Cruver tells USA TODAY Sports. ‘All the lessons I learned along the way with these tech startups, I want to apply to this big, broken thing, which is college sports recruiting.

‘There’s a lot of adjectives. Let’s start with inefficient: Extremely inefficient for everybody involved. No one really likes how it works. They just kind of accept it as how it is. Most parents and athletes don’t know what the process is until it’s over.

‘It was chaos and it was confusing and we never really knew what was going on. And it worked out for (my son). It doesn’t work out for everybody. We were frustrated, but at the same time, we were very involved parents with resources, and I was looking around at these other athletes whose parents are maybe not as involved, and maybe don’t have as many resources and feeling like, ‘OK, we didn’t like this experience, imagine what it’s like for everybody else.’ ‘

Expensive is another adjective. There are websites and/or advisors that charge hundreds, if not thousands of dollars to help get your kid onto a college team. Scorability is free to athletes.

‘Don’t pay for recruiting services,’ says Dupont, Penn’s recruiting coordinator. ‘The recruiting services that parents pay for, these recruiting gurus, when I get messages from them, I want to turn them off. I don’t even know them. I’m talking about individual recruiting advisors. Tons of those people out there are getting paid good money from families to do exactly what they’re doing. But their interest is not the kids’ interest. It’s their own interest to continue to get paid. So they’ll go out there and they’ll sell anybody they can possibly sell.

‘And then they know better than you. And I’ve had that before, too, guys getting offended with our evaluation. I would rather the high school coach reach out to me. I trust him. And I have a relationship with him and I go visit him.’

Penn’s staff has used Scorability, which has, among other clients, TCU, Miami (Fla.), Oklahoma State, SMU as well as a junior colleges and Division II and III schools.

The better student you are, the better chance you have of playing college sports. But coaches separate you based on your athletic numbers, also known as your metrics: Not only your height and weight, but also your speed, strength and jumping ability. If you’re a baseball player, it’s velocity as a pitcher and exit velocity as hitter; a volleyball player, it’s how high you touch.

‘I think all parents exaggerate,’ says Benson, also Penn’s defensive coordinator who has been a head or assistant college coach for four decades. ‘That’s why you have to get back to metrics.’

Make sure you’re realistic about your chances at a school and have the metrics to qualify

Scan the online rosters of schools for which you’re interested in playing and look at heights and weights of their players. Many coaches will want to see you in person at the camps they run for high school prospects. Find out the specific metric numbers they’re looking for you to hit.

Coaches also want your numbers to be verified. If your son is a baseball player, for example, and plays in Perfect Game or Prep Baseball Report tournaments, his metrics will be recorded and stored on profile pages through those organizations.

One of Scorability’s benefits is it collects and compiles your metrics from college camps you attend. Coaches who subscribe to Scorability can see data from thousands of camps (and showcases) for their sport. These are athletes who want to be recruited and are choosing to share the data with college programs.

Scorability has recently acquired Ryzer, which puts on showcase camps for a number of sports, meaning all of your information from Ryzer camps (and other camp partners) will be stored in Scorability.

‘A lot of kids are magically two inches taller than they really are,’ says Cruver, Scorability’s CEO. ‘Think about how much traveling all these coaches are doing around the country, only to find out that a 6-4 kid is really 6-2.

‘We do a good job of getting verified measurables, visual content, photos and videos. So in the case of football, it’s not just their 40 (-yard dash) time, it’s a verified 40 time with a video of the 40 being run, with a mentality assessment and a coach evaluation on that kid. So you get to know, he runs a 4.3, great. But what’s he going to be like in the locker room?’

How do you present yourself to a school in the best possible way?

Penn has paid for Scorability and other services like Catapult, Verified Athletics and The UCReport. Penn’s coaches receive numerous emails per day from such services with names of potential players.

It’s the job of coaches at schools like Penn without recruiting departments to scour the data.

As a recruit, you need ways to jump off the page apart from your numbers as coaches sort you by, say, class, region of the country, GPA or SAT score.

‘We really value when parents are honest about (how) these are the strengths of my son, these are the weaknesses, these are the areas that I’d like to see him grow, this is the type of program that I think he would thrive in and why,’ says Jerheme Urban, a former NFL wide receiver and the head football coach at Division III Trinity University, which uses Scorability. ‘The more information that we can gather on the front end of things outside of just the metrics really allows us to be more intentional.

‘I’m not gonna a disqualify kid from our recruitment process if the parents talk about the areas of growth that their kid needs. I think that’s self-aware. We’ve seen some really good parent evals come in as well in terms of how they’ve helped him grow in certain areas.’

Cruver says one of the goals of Scorability is to help kids stand out for their human qualities as much as their metrics.

‘These coaches will watch thousands of hours of highlights and video,’ he says. ‘And they get a good sense of athleticism from that. But they may narrow it down to 20 kids who athletically are about the same. And then what every coach tells us in every sport, whether it’s softball or golf or football, what it really comes down to is who do they want in their locker room? Who do they want in their weight room? Who’s gonna be loyal to the team? Who’s gonna be coachable? Who’s gonna be a good teammate? We had a golf coach the other day tell us, ‘When I recruit, I’m thinking about who do I want to ride in a van with for six hours?’ ‘

Playing a collegiate sport can be like a full-time job. Coaches want to know if you are willing to wake up at 5:30 every morning for a practice or a workout. Do you want to hit the weight room six times a week? Can you squeeze in studying and sleep, too?

I was a collegiate rower for three years. I decided to stop so I could stay up late to study, socialize with friends and have more time to pursue a career path my senior year. In other words, to have a typical college experience.

Dupont, Penn’s recruiting coordinator, played Division III baseball and football at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. It led him to coaching.

He wasn’t making full-time money with benefits until he was 30 and, yet, he said in nearly the same breath, he can’t imagine doing anything else.

‘You’re just constantly locked into something, whether it’s the football season, recruiting, offseason workout programs with your players,’ he said. ‘But I love it.’

Part III (final installment) coming next weekend:Using sports to find a life path for success.

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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The College Football Playoff picture got much clearer in Week 14.

No. 1 Ohio State survived a wobbly start and beat No. 15 Michigan 27-9 to snap a four-game losing streak in the rivalry and book a spot opposite No. 2 Indiana in the Big Ten championship game.

On Friday, the Hoosiers swamped Purdue 56-3 to remain unbeaten heading into next Saturday’s clash at Lucas Oil Stadium.

The matchup for the Big 12 championship is also set after No. 7 Texas Tech blew away West Virginia 49-0 and No. 11 Brigham Young dug out of a 14-0 deficit in a 41-21 win against Central Florida.

Half of the ACC race finished according to plan with No. 17 Virginia’s 27-7 win against Virginia Tech. But No. 25 SMU was upset by California, eliminating the Mustangs and sending five-loss Duke into a matchup with the Cavaliers. The Blue Devils edge ahead of No. 13 Miami because of a better conference opponent winning percentage.

Over in the SEC, No. 10 Alabama booked a spot opposite No. 4 Georgia by winning the Iron Bowl against Auburn with a late touchdown.

The American race was settled after No. 22 North Texas won 52-25 against Temple and No. 23 Tulane blanked Charlotte 27-0, setting up a matchup that will determine the Group of Five’s playoff berth.

Elsewhere, Jacksonville State will face Kennesaw State in the Conference USA championship game, Western Michigan and Miami (Ohio) in the MAC and No. 21 James Madison and Troy in the Sun Belt.

Computer rankings will be used to break a multiple-team tie atop the Mountain West.

As expected, rivalry weekend has brought the playoff race into focus. The Buckeyes, No. 8 Oklahoma and the Wolverines lead Saturday’s biggest winners and losers:

Winners

Ohio State

There’s the obvious boost a win against Michigan will give the defending national champions heading into the Big Ten championship. There’s also the Heisman Trophy boost for quarterback Julian Sayin, who stumbled out of the gate but finished with 233 yards and three touchdowns. There’s also a big-time safety net: Ohio State can lose to Indiana and still draw a top four seed and an opening-round bye. Most of all, though, pushing around Michigan in Ann Arbor is the biggest statement to date from a team that has nearly gone wire to wire atop the US LBM Coaches Poll.

Oklahoma

Not the biggest win in program history, and certainly not the prettiest. But you can’t overstate the importance and beauty of a 17-13 win against LSU, which sends Oklahoma into the playoff as an at-large pick after being essentially written off as a contender heading into November. To do so, the Sooners had to overcome a sputtering offense that turned the ball over three times and ran for just 77 yards. They can credit a defense that time and again this season has carried the load, putting this team on their back to bounce back from a disappointing SEC debut. Look for Oklahoma to be a host in the opening round.

Alabama

This one wasn’t pretty, either, but Alabama’s 27-20 win against Auburn caps a topsy-turvy home stretch of the regular season and avoids what would’ve been a very tumultuous offseason for coach Kalen DeBoer. Ahead 17-0 with five minutes left in the first half, the Crimson Tide had to survive a stressful fourth quarter to punch their ticket for a rematch with Georgia. Ty Simpson averaged just 3.5 yards per attempt but had three touchdowns, including the go-ahead score with 3:50 to play, while the Alabama defense got the job done despite losing the plot on two quick-strike Auburn touchdown drives in the second half. Now, the questions of the week: Can Alabama lose to Georgia and still earn an at-large berth? What if the Bulldogs win by a couple of scores?

Texas Tech and Brigham Young

Texas Tech completed a dominant run through conference play by destroying the Mountaineers. BYU fell behind early but eventually pulled away from feisty UCF, which was looking to secure bowl eligibility. The stage is set for a rematch of the Red Raiders’ 29-7 win earlier this month. The best-case scenario for the Big 12 has BYU winning a close game to land the automatic bid while Tech lands gently in an at-large spot.

Oregon

No. 5 Oregon muscled out a 26-14 win against Washington and will be the third Big Ten team in the playoff field, potentially as high as the No. 6 seed. After the committee raised some questions about a weaker strength of schedule in early November, the Ducks closed things out with wins against Iowa, No. 20 Southern California and the Huskies to put together a solid postseason résumé. While not as dominant as last year’s team, which went unbeaten and was the tournament’s top seed, Oregon looks capable of playing for and winning the national championship.

Vanderbilt

No. 14 Vanderbilt emptied Neyland Stadium ahead of schedule and beat No. 18 Tennessee 45-24 to keep alive the dream of making the playoff as an at-large pick. While that will take some help, one thing is sure: Diego Pavia should be a Heisman finalist after throwing for 268 yards, running for 165 yards and willing the Commodores to double-digit wins for the first time. Regardless of the postseason destination, this has been the best year in program history.

Miami

Losses to Louisville and SMU will keep Miami out of the ACC championship. But the Hurricanes have done their part to be under heavy consideration for an at-large berth after beating No. 24 Pittsburgh 38-7 for a fourth win this year against a team that was ranked in the Coaches Poll at the time of the game. Another factor to keep in mind: Miami is rolling right now, winning four in a row by a combined score of 151-41 to end the year. That still might not be enough. But the Hurricanes deserve to play a big role in the how the committee approaches the tournament’s at-large bids.

At-the-wire bowl teams

Eight teams secured a sixth win and postseason eligibility on Saturday, though conference tie-ins mean not every team is guaranteed a bowl bid. Those who came in just under the wire: Kansas State, Penn State, Washington State, Delaware, Arkansas State, Georgia Southern, Texas State, Louisiana-Lafayette and Army. Falling short, however, were Florida State, Central Florida, Kentucky and Baylor.

Losers

Michigan

The Wolverines were unable to match the Buckeyes’ physicality and had no chance of finding another avenue to a fifth series win in a row given the utter failures of the passing game. Quarterback Bryce Underwood finished just 8 of 18 for 63 yards with an interception and never pushed the ball downfield, let alone to the first-downs sticks. Meanwhile, Ohio State was able to combat the weather and Michigan’s early surge to perform a much-needed exorcism before facing high-powered Indiana. While a win would’ve given the Wolverines a shot at the Big Ten championship game and an at-large berth, they are now eliminated from playoff contention.

The ACC

SMU trailed 31-14 one play into the fourth quarter, went on a torrid run to take a 35-31 lead with 2:22 to play but couldn’t stop California from going back ahead for good on a touchdown run with 42 seconds left. The Mustangs’ 38-35 loss is a total disaster for the ACC that leaves open the possibility the league is shut out of the playoff entirely. That’s because of the chance that Duke beats Virginia, leaving a five-loss conference champion to compare to what would be a 12-win James Madison team that steamrolled through the Sun Belt. In the end, the league’s saving grace might be the Dukes’ non-conference loss to Louisville. Even if that’s the case, the ACC has gone from a chance at getting two teams in the field — the Cavaliers or Mustangs and Miami, possibly — to not having even one.

Florida State

Another embarrassing season ended with another embarrassment, this one a 40-21 loss to Florida that leaves FSU short of the postseason for the second year in a row. In a two-year run full of low points, this one stands out. With bowl play in sight, the Seminoles were listless, ineffective and punchless against a team with nothing on the line except bragging rights. While Mike Norvell is expected to return in 2026, he will be atop every offseason hot-seat list in what will undoubtedly be a make-or-break season.

Josh Heupel

Not every team is going to make the playoff every season. And it’s not like this has been an absolutely awful year: Tennessee still won eight games and spent a good chunk of the year in the playoff mix. But the Volunteers also beat nobody of consequence and dropped their four biggest games of the year, to Georgia, Alabama, Oklahoma and Vanderbilt. That won’t cost Josh Heupel his job, but he will be under increased scrutiny and pressure heading into next season.

Just thankful it’s over

Many teams are just happy to close the book on the 2025 season. That includes Colorado, which dropped to 3-9 with a loss to Kansas State, and Arkansas, which finished winless in the SEC after losing to Missouri. Also happy to be moving on: Wisconsin closed things out with a loss to Minnesota, Rutgers finished a very disappointing year by losing at home to Penn State, Liberty lost to Kennesaw State in double overtime, Syracuse dropped an eighth game in a row to Boston College and finished last in the ACC and North Carolina closed out Bill Belichick’s miserable debut with a 42-19 loss to North Carolina State.

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Manny Pacquiao’s oldest son made his professional boxing debut and he is undefeated.

He’s also winless.

Jimuel Pacquiao, 24, fought to a majority draw against Brendan Lally at the Pechanga Resort Casino in Temecula, California on Saturday, Nov. 29.

After the four-round, lightweight bout came to an end, one judge scored the fight 39–37 in favor of Jimuel Pacquiao and the other two judges scored it 38-38.

The fight came less than two weeks after Jimuel’s fiancée gave birth to the couple’s daughter. He said it made preparing for the fight difficult, but he also told Fight Hub TV he could’ve prepared harder.

‘No excuses,’ Jimuel Pacquiao said. ‘I could’ve done better.’

Manny Pacquiao, the Hall of Fame boxer from the Philippines, watched the fight from ringside.

‘He did well for the first fight,’ Manny Pacquiao told Fight Hub TV.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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LOS ANGELES — An unknown offseason awaits Nico Iamaleava. 

The UCLA quarterback finished his first season as a Bruin with a tough season as they lost to rival USC in the regular season finale on Saturday, Nov. 29 to finish 3-9 on the campaign.

Now with the season done, attention will be on whether Iamaleava will decide to stay in Westwood or look for a new team in 2026. After the loss to the Trojans, Iamaleava was noncommittal on what his future holds. 

“No I haven’t,” Iamaleava said when asked by USA TODAY Sports if he’s thought about his future. “I was focused on this game and practice.”

A redshirt sophomore, Iamaleava has two years of eligibility left in his college career. After this season, he is eligible to make the jump to professional football. 

Iamaleava was one of the most polarizing transfers in the country after his awkward departure from Tennessee in April following a reported NIL dispute. After he led the Volunteers to the College Football Playoff in his first season as the starting quarterback, Iamaleava left Knoxville and joined UCLA, returning home to Southern California to join the Bruins. 

His arrival brought palpable hype to a UCLA team in desperate need of a jolt following a 5-7 record in Deshaun Foster’s first season. Instead, it turned into a dud after the Bruins were routed by Utah in the season opener and started the campaign 0-4. Foster was fired after UCLA lost by 25 points to New Mexico in Week 3.

Despite the rough start, Iamaleava’s best performance came in Week 6, when the winless Bruins stunned then-No. 6 Penn State at the Rose Bowl. He threw for 166 yards and had a game-high 130 rushing yards with five total touchdowns in the upset. 

It was the start of a three-game win streak that changed the feelings in Westwood as there was belief the Bruins could possibly make a bowl game. However, Indiana beat UCLA by 50 points to end the streak and the Bruins lost five straight games to end the 2025 season.

The second losing streak came as Iamaleava dealt with injuries. He missed the game against Ohio State with a concussion and suffered another injury in the second half of the loss to Washington, which forced him out of the remainder of the game.

While Iamaleava didn’t have the season he and UCLA envisioned, he had good moments on what was a struggling team. He played in 11 games and finished with 1,928 passing yards, 13 touchdowns and seven interceptions. He also was the team’s leading rusher with 674 yards and four touchdown runs. 

“It was a great learning year for me,” he said. “I think it just showed that I’m willing to go out there and put my life on the line for my teammates whenever it’s needed.”

If Iamaleava were to leave UCLA, he would likely be a highly sought transfer portal addition for Power Four teams in need of an experienced quarterback. Iamaleava’s uncertain future also comes as UCLA still tries to hire its next coach. He said he hasn’t “really thought” on if UCLA’s next coach would factor in his decision.

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  • Colorado coach Deion Sanders promised ‘severe changes’ after his team finished the season with a 3-9 record.
  • The Buffaloes lost their final game of the season 24-14 to Kansas State, marking their fifth straight loss.
  • Players cited a lack of leadership as a contributing factor to the team’s struggles this season.

Colorado coach Deion Sanders made a bold promise about the future of his football team after a 24-14 loss at Kansas State on Saturday in the final game of his third season in charge.

He called it the ‘Last Supper” — a Biblical reference to the last supper of Christ before his crucifixion and resurrection. After finishing the season with a 3-9 record, it was the last thing Sanders said to reporters before heading back home to make “severe changes” to his roster and coaching staff.

“If anybody’s built to reconcile and to get this back on course, it’s me,” Sanders said after the game in Manhattan, Kansas. “And I will do it if it’s the last thing I do on Earth. Trust me when I tell you: This was the last supper. God bless you.”

Sanders also reminded reporters that he’s “not a loser.”

“I don’t handle it well,” he said. “I don’t cope well.”

The Buffaloes finished with five straight losses and beat only one team with a winning record in 2025 (Iowa State). They were also 0-5 in road games and 1-8 in the Big 12 Conference.

“We won’t be in this situation again, I promise you that,” Sanders said. “I can promise you that, because I’m not happy with nothing right now. Nothing.

What happened in Deion Sanders’ final game of 2025?

His team showed a heartbeat despite the cold and snowy conditions in front of an announced crowd of 49,549. The Buffaloes even pulled to within 17-14 with 7:03 remaining after 1-yard touchdown run by running back Micah Welch. But then the bottom fell out on the next defensive series. Kansas State running back Joe Jackson burst up the middle, broke a tackle and spun loose into the end zone for a 17-yard score with 2:43 remaining to help put his team 24-14.

In response, the Buffs couldn’t move the ball past the Kansas State 42-yard line and turned the ball over on downs after a sack. Sanders even declined to use its final two timeouts.

Jackson finished the game with 142 yards and three touchdowns on 26 carries.

Sanders said afterward that change is the first order of business when he returns to Boulder.

“I see everything being different, even me,” Sanders said of next season.

Colorado players blame lack of leadership

Senior quarterback Kaidon Salter made his ninth start of the season for Colorado, this time replacing freshman Julian Lewis, who sat out the game to take a redshirt year this season. Salter completed 14-of-25 passes for 172 yards with one interception.

The Buffs used three quarterbacks this year, including two starts for Lewis and one for sophomore Ryan Staub.

“We been playing a lot of different quarterbacks,” Salter said afterward. “Nobody really knew who that guy was from spring ball to now.”

Salter said that helped create a leadership void after the departure of last year’s starting quarterback, Shedeur Sanders, Deion’s son.

“Sometimes when it’s one week you’re starting here, then the next you’re on the bench, so now you want to listen to this guy instead of this guy,” Salter said. “So it was just, it was a lot of confusion in our room, but I’m sure next year, they’ll be way better with it.”

Colorado linebacker Jeremiah Brown added that natural leaders don’t need to ‘try’ to lead.

“It just naturally happens,” Brown said. “And unfortunately, we just didn’t have very many of those.”

What will Deion Sanders do now?

Changes are in store for his coaching staff. Running backs coach Marshall Faulk is expected to be named the new head coach of Southern on Monday. Offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur was stripped of play-calling duties this year with a contract expiring in January.

Their roster is another matter. Sanders hopes to keep a core group of top players, including Lewis, the quarterback, who said he is committed to staying at Colorado. Standout offensive tackle Jordan Seaton might be a harder sell with one season left before he’s expected to leave for the NFL.

Sanders was asked about talent retention after the game.

“The No. 1 reason people leave is money,” Sanders said. He said that wasn’t an excuse. But “it helps,” he said.

It’s also clear his program needs more than just another offseason commitment to getting stronger and bigger physically.

“It could make them look like Tarzan,” he said. “But we can’t play like Jane.”

Sanders even credited reporters for putting up with what they say this year.

‘God bless you guys,’ he said to them. ‘You guys have been kind even considering the foolishness that you saw on the field and on the sideline this whole year. I appreciate you guys… You don’t have to go easy on me. I’m a big boy. I’ve been doing this for a long time. And when I win, I don’t mind a clap. When I lose, I don’t mind a boo. I played this game. I know this game, like the back of my hand. And I love this game. And I love all the ups and downs and ins and outs about it. And I’m built for every last bit of it.’

Sanders’ three-year record at Colorado is now 16-21, including a 4-8 season in 2023, followed by 9-4 last year.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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